I do art because it is fun.

Joined May 2022
198 Photos and videos
chris_hcreative retweeted
This isn’t conspiracy theory. This is the Liberal blueprint — laid out in black and white. Bill C-2: Warrantless data sharing at the border. Bill C-22: Backdoors and mass metadata collection on every Canadian. Bill C-8: Power to throttle or shut down networks and utilities. Bill C-9 & C-63: Vague “hate” definitions to police speech and thought. Bill C-11: Control what you see and share online. Bill C-34: Force you to upload government ID just to use social media. Piece by piece. Bill by bill. They told us it was about “safety,” “children,” and “modernizing laws.” What they built is a digital cage — surveillance infrastructure control speech restrictions pre-crime penalties. And now Carney’s government is accelerating it, not reversing it. This isn’t Canada anymore. This is what happens when a government stops seeing citizens as free people and starts seeing them as data points to be managed. If you’re still shrugging this off, you’re not paying attention. Drop a 🔥 if you see exactly what this is. #cdnpoli #DigitalCage #BillC22 #BillC63 #Censorship #Privacy #CanadaFirst #LiberalFail
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chris_hcreative retweeted
🚨BREAKING NEWS: the Orwellian Surveillance state is officially coming to Canada. The Carney government just filed a motion to ram Bill C-22, the mass Canadian spy bill, through Parliament by the end of this week. Here’s their play: ✅ Amendments kept SECRET from the public before the vote ✅ Zero discussion on any remaining amendments ✅ Weeks of expert testimony from the Privacy Commissioner, lawyers, security companies, discarded ✅ Only 30 minutes of committee debate They want all the big tech companies to be forced into metadata retention, encryption backdoors, warrantless data sharing. Not to mention that they introduced Bill C-36, which strips the Privacy Commissioner’s role in private sector privacy regulation. The privacy regulator gutted on Monday. The surveillance bill rammed through on Tuesday. The amendments hidden from Canadians on Wednesday. Spying on us by next week? So this is what Carney means when he said doing things “at speeds not seen in generations?”
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RT @ShangguanJiewen: 95% of Tibetans were slaves or serfs before China expelled the imperialist aggressive forces. China freed the slaves.…
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chris_hcreative retweeted
Görüntüler Batı Şeria'nın Nablus şehrine bağlı Hawwara kasabasından,israil askeri Filistin'li genci ailesinin yanında zorla kaçırmak istiyor, genç itiraz edince orada yargısız infaz yaparak katlediyor, dünya, israil terörünü konuşmuyor !
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chris_hcreative retweeted
🇨🇳 China is Using Robots Powered by Solar Panels to Clean Solar Panels.
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chris_hcreative retweeted
🇯🇵🇺🇸 Japan ran Unit 731’s human death labs on Chinese soil: the US then gave its scientists immunity for the data instead of justice 🇨🇳 A two-part documentary from CNA Insider released on YouTube earlier this month and it does something most Unit 731 coverage doesn’t. It pairs the full record of what happened inside the facility with the post-war American deal that let the men who ran it walk free. The series is called Inside Unit 731: Japan’s Secret Human Experiments. Part 1 covers the death lab itself at Pingfang, near Harbin. Part 2 covers what happened after Japan surrendered. The central figure is Hideo Shimizu. He’s in his mid-90s now. He was a 14-year-old recruit when he arrived in early 1945. In this documentary he goes further than he has before, exploring the scale of the complex, the prisoners referred to as “maruta”, the pathogen experiments where infection was effectively a death sentence and the orders to destroy evidence as Soviet forces closed in. He goes back to the Harbin ruins on camera. Part 1 documents the experiments in detail. Deliberate infection with plague, anthrax and cholera. Open-air tests at Anda, vivisections, field deployments against Chinese civilians, one documented operation in Quzhou in 1940 used plague-infected fleas and killed thousands. There is testimony from Chinese survivors, it also covers the unit’s Singapore branch, which bred fleas specifically for those attacks. Part 2 is the harder watch. After 1945, the United States offered Shiro Ishii and the core scientists full immunity from war crimes prosecution. In exchange, they handed over the human experiment data. US officials knew exactly how that data was produced, it fed directly into American biological weapons programmes. The men involved largely avoided the Tokyo Trials and returned to senior positions in Japanese medicine and academia. The only prosecution that actually happened was the Soviet trial at Khabarovsk in 1949. Twelve men were convicted. The documentary also examines evidence that some Allied POWs may have been used in experiments and the families who are still piecing together what happened through diaries and declassified files. Eighty years on, this is not a closed chapter. Witnesses like Shimizu are still alive to speak. Declassified records keep confirming the terms of the deal. The victims were overwhelmingly Chinese, on Chinese soil. Western accounts have generally treated Unit 731 as a footnote to the Pacific War or a lesser footnote to Nuremberg. This series refuses that framing. What it shows is the structural logic: after 1945, great power competition rewarded whoever could supply useful data. China carried the dead and the lasting damage. The men whose work produced that data got protection. If accountability applied consistently, Unit 731 would sit alongside the Nazi medical experiments in every serious historical treatment. It doesn’t. The question is why power still determines whose dead get remembered and whose get forgotten. Worth watching. Watch part 1 and 2 in the thread below.
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A Dragonzord sketch line art. #maccadam #maccadams #powerrangers #lineart
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chris_hcreative retweeted
Chinese excavator operators are amazing. 🇨🇳 The excavator is the king of the construction site. Moving poles, drilling holes, and setting them in place, every step is smooth and precise. They make difficult jobs look easy.👍
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chris_hcreative retweeted
The most brutal part is not that China is using AI to sort garbage. It is that China has pushed waste management so far that the old problem has reversed. China used to worry about having too much garbage to process. Now some waste-to-energy plants are facing the opposite problem: not enough garbage. Previously sealed landfills may even have to be reopened, not because China failed, but because waste has become fuel, feedstock, data, and part of an industrial recycling loop. This is what China does best. It takes the ugliest, dirtiest, most ignored corner of urban life — garbage — and turns it into engineering, automation, energy recovery, environmental governance, and industrial optimization. Even trash gets absorbed into the machine. In many countries, garbage is where governance collapses. In China, even garbage becomes a system.
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chris_hcreative retweeted
my fave designs for the big 4
My fav designs for the big 4 Decepticons (Throw a Marvel blue/ black helmet on E.J. Su's 2006 era Megatron design and now youre really cooking)
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chris_hcreative retweeted
"They killed two million Koreans in three years." — Bassem Youssef
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chris_hcreative retweeted
1/ Canada’s new Bill C-34 (the Safe Social Media Act) claims to protect kids under 16 by banning them from social media. In reality, it forces platforms to implement age-verification and age-estimation for everyone — and that creates serious privacy risks for all Canadians. 2/ The bill requires affected social media platforms to “implement age-verification and age-estimation measures” designed to prevent anyone under 16 from having an account. To make this “effective,” platforms will have to check the age of every single user, not just suspected minors. That means collecting more personal data from adults too. 3/ Common methods include uploading government ID (driver’s licence, passport) or using biometric age estimation (facial geometry, skin elasticity, etc.). The bill talks about protecting and eventually destroying this data — but it’s not clear how this will actually work in practice, and the measures must still be “effective.” 4/ This isn’t just a one-time check. To keep kids off platforms long-term, companies may need ongoing monitoring and verification. Result: Social media access in Canada becomes tied to surrendering more personal information as a precondition of participation in the digital public square. 5/ Privacy experts and groups like the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms are raising alarms. This kind of mass age-verification system engages section 8 of the Charter (protection against unreasonable search and seizure) and risks turning platforms into data-collection arms of the state. 6/ Proponents say it’s about protecting children from harm. Critics argue it’s ineffective (kids will find workarounds) while creating a dangerous precedent of mandatory ID/biometric checks for basic online participation — and it affects everyone, not just kids. 7/ We’ve seen similar concerns with other recent bills (like aspects of C-22). The pattern is clear: broad powers framed as “safety” that end up expanding surveillance and reducing privacy for ordinary Canadians. What do you think — is this the right way to protect kids, or does it go too far?
Bill C-34 creates a social media ban for Canadians under 16 at the expense of all Canadians' privacy. Sections 26, 27(1), and 27(2) of Bill C-34 require that affected social media platforms “implement age-verification and age-estimation measures designed to prevent a person under the age of 16 from being able to have an account with, or be otherwise registered with,” those social media platforms. Bill C-34 requires that such measures must provide for the “protection” and eventual “destruction” of “personal information that is collected for age-verification or age-estimation purposes.” It is not yet clear how this will be accomplished. What is clear is that these measures must be “effective.” Users commonly verify their age by submitting government-issued identification documents, such as driver’s licenses or passports. And, the technology exists for social media platforms to estimate the ages of users through biometric data, e.g., facial geometry, eye shape, skin elasticity, hairline, etcetera. This age-verification and age-estimation monitoring will not be limited to Canadians under age 16. For social media platforms to determine access eligibility for any user, platforms will have to evaluate the access eligibility of every user. The goal of Bill C-34 is not merely to remove Canadians under age 16 from affected social media platforms but to keep them off those platforms. To achieve this goal, social media platforms may be compelled to adopt ongoing age-verification/estimation measures to ensure continued compliance. However affected social media platforms satisfy these requirements, Bill C-34 fundamentally reimagines how all Canadians access social media. This Bill deputizes affected social media platforms into forcing Canadians to surrender more data as a precondition of participation in the digital public square. This, in turn, raises serious concerns about Canadians' privacy rights and may engage constitutional protections against unreasonable search and seizure - guaranteed by section 8 of the Charter. Read the full text of the bill here: parl.ca/documentviewer/en/45…
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chris_hcreative retweeted
😮Meanwhile in China...🇨🇳 New sweeper can clean at 80 km/h. 👇 x.com/IndianGems_/status/206…

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chris_hcreative retweeted
パランティアの人間からバルファキスが聞いた話。本当なら今すぐ地獄の業火に灼かれるべき。 ガザの住民密集地を🇮🇱が爆撃する時のスマホを持って逃げ惑うガザの人々の動き「パニックインプリント」をAIに食わせて訓練し「パニック防止AI」として英国NHSに14億ドルで売った

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chris_hcreative retweeted
Este video tiene 35 años. Dejen de fingir que esto empezó el 7 de octubre.
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chris_hcreative retweeted
Why can North Korea, a country with an economy less than 1% the size of Canada, build more housing than Canada and the US? (Even mainstream Western media like the Wall Street Journal have had to acknowledge North Korea’s economic growth)
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chris_hcreative retweeted
Every time I watch a 90s mecha anime, I'm reminded how ridiculously talented those animators were
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chris_hcreative retweeted
WOW. AlJazeera just dropped a ONE HOUR documentary about ISRAEL’s CRIMES against the PALESTINIANS. This is very HARD TO WATCH.
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chris_hcreative retweeted
HEART TO HEART/彩子 勇者警察ジェイデッカー OP(1994~1995年) BRAVE POLICE J-DECKER OP #90s_retro_anime
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chris_hcreative retweeted
Currently watching The Brave Police J-Decker (1995).
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